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Tidal disruption of star clusters in galaxy formation simulations

We investigate the evolution of the tidal field experienced by massive star clusters using cosmological simulations of Milky Way-sized galaxies. Clusters in our simulations experience the strongest tidal force in the first few hundred Myr after formation, when the maximum eigenvalue of the tidal tensor reaches several times $10^4$ Gyr$^{-2}$. After about 1 Gyr the tidal field plateaus at a lower value, with the median $λ_{\rm m} \sim 3 \times 10^3$ Gyr$^{-2}$. The fraction of time clusters spend in high tidal strength ($λ_{\rm m} > 3 \times 10^4$ Gyr$^{-2}$) regions also decreases with their age from $\sim$20% immediately after formation to less than 1% after 1 Gyr. At early ages both the in situ and ex situ clusters experience similar tidal fields, while at older ages the in situ clusters in general experience stronger tidal field due to their lower orbits in host galaxy. This difference is reflected in the survival of clusters: we looked into cluster disruption calculated in simulation runtime and found that ex situ star clusters of the same initial mass typically end up with higher bound fraction at the last available simulation snapshot than the in situ ones.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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